Difference Between Garnet & Topaz

The differences between gemstones topaz and garnet range from color to countries of origin. Topaz is harder than garnet, but both are durable and can be worn daily.

  1. Color

    • Garnets come in many colors, red being the most popular, according to the Gemological Institute of America (GIA.) Red garnet comes in three species: almandine is a medium-red, rhodolite is red with purple or raspberry tinges and pyrope is darkest red. Other colors include orange, green, and yellow.

      Topaz has a wide range of colors: blue, green, yellow, orange, red, pink and purple as well as colorless.

    Hardness

    • Garnet has a hardness of 6.5 to 7.5 on the Moh's scale, which is a relative scale measuring a mineral's resistance to scratching by another substance. The hardest substance, a diamond, is a 10 on the Moh's scale. Topaz's hardness on the Mohs scale is 8.

    Origin

    • Garnets are mined in East Africa, India and Sri Lanka, according to the GIA, which also said that topaz is mined in wider variety of places: Australia, Brazil, Madagascar, Mexico, Myanmar (Burma), Namibia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and the United States.

    Birthstones

    • Garnet is the traditional birthstone for January as adopted by the American National Association of Jewelers in 1912. November's traditional birthstone is the yellow Topaz.

    History

    • "Garnet" gets its name from the Latin word "garanatus," meaning "seedlike," referring to a pomegranate, and topaz gets its name from the Greek word "topazion," which could come from the Sanskrit meaning, "fire," according to Jewelsforme.com.

    Cost

    • According to the International Color Gemstone Association, the Imperial topaz and tsavorite garnet range from $50 to $1,000 per carat. Pink topaz and demantoid garnet range from $250 to $5,000 per carat. Blue topaz, although quite popular, can range from $5 to $100 per carat.

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